BEIJING. – Argentina steamrolled into the basketball World Cup semifinals with a spectacular 97-87 win over pre-tournament favorite Serbia, and was joined by 2006 champion Spain, which overpowered surprise package Poland 90-78 on Tuesday.
The Argentines will lock horns with either defending champion United States or France, which meet in Wednesday’s opening quarterfinal, while the Spaniards will take on the winner of the Australia versus Czech Republic clash.
Playmaker Facundo Campazzo sank 18 points and racked up 12 assists while evergreen 39-year-old center Luis Scola scored 20 points as Argentina picked Serbia apart with a barrage of fast breaks and lethal long-range shooting.
Argentina nailed nine three-pointers in the opening half and kept piercing Serbia’s defense as
Campazzo drove past his markers almost at will and dished out passes like confetti.
A Marko Guduric three-pointer briefly gave Serbia a 70-68 lead early in the fourth quarter but Argentina roared back with a 14-3 run that put the game beyond its rival’s reach.
Patricio Garino netted 15 points for the winners, Gabriel Deck added 13 and Luca Vildoza chipped in with 11, while Bogdan Bogdanovic scored a game-high 21 for Serbia.
Denver Nuggets center Nikola Jokic carried Serbia’s first-half effort with 14 points but netted only two after the break, having spent too many minutes on the court as his replacements failed to make any impact.
Serbia coach Aleksandar Djordjevic, who won the 1998 World Cup with the former Yugoslavia as a player, heaped praise on the Argentines and conceded that Serbia’s billing as one of the tournament favorites had been counterproductive.
“This is Campazzo’s win, all credit to him,” Djordjevic told reporters in Dongguan.
“Scola, on the other hand, is Argentina’s emotional leader. They all played a fantastic game, they hit a bunch of tough shots with defenders in their faces, won their individual battles against our guys.
“The atmosphere was too euphoric back home in Serbia as everyone was saying we were going to win the World Cup. I know only too well what kind of pressure that generates and sometimes it just doesn’t help.”
Spain, which brushed Serbia aside 81-69 in their final second group stage match, was made to work hard by a battling Polish side but its deep roster made the difference.
Forward Juancho Hernangomez netted 12 of his 14 points in a frantic three-minute spell in the second quarter and his brother Willy hit some clutch shots in the last five minutes after Poland had slashed a double-figures deficit to 76-72.
Playmaker Ricky Rubio, who again pulled all the strings for Spain, led them with 19 points, Willy Hernangomez added 18 and 34-year-old guard Rudy Fernandez sank 16, having buried all his five shots from three-point range.